Oakland Raiders defensive tackle Warren Sapp chases down and yells at official Garth DeFelice, who steps off yardage on one of Sapp's three successive unsportsmanlike conduct penalties late in the first half of the Jacksonville Jaguars' 49-11 victory over the Raiders on Sunday, Dec. 23, 2007, in Jacksonville, Fla. (AP Photo/The Florida Times-Union, Rick Wilson) ** TV OUT MAGS OUT ** TV OUT MAGS OUT EFE OUT EFE OUT

Raiders tempest Warren Sapp cursed, swore and gestured wildly, and that's just while explaining to a reporter what he did - and didn't do - to the officiating crew Sunday.

Sapp hasn't been fined or suspended yet for his ejection from Sunday's 49-11 loss to the Jaguars, but he won't be surprised if the FedEx envelope arrives at Raiders headquarters.

"Come on, you know how it works," Sapp said in the locker room Wednesday. "It's all a PR shtick. The big, bad 99 has done it now. Whatever, man. I have no recourse. It's only me. It's always been me."

Sapp was ejected after getting flagged for three straight unsportsmanlike conducts in a single argument, with the ejection coming for bumping an official - something Sapp said he never did.

"It was all just words," Sapp said. "I never put my hand on nobody, never bumped nobody, never did anything. Come on, I've never touched anybody in any shape, form or anything."

Well, there was that time in October 2003, when Sapp was with the Buccaneers playing against the Redskins. Sapp was fined $50,000 for bumping an official before the game and for what the league called repeated violations of abusing officials.

This time, Sapp said he has no idea why he was flagged or ejected. Head referee Jerome Boger said the flags were for "disrespectfully addressing the official" and for continuing on after each penalty.

"What have I done to be ejected?" Sapp said. "I've broken no rule to be ejected from a football game. As I know this game and have played it for the last 12, 13 years, I have done nothing that infringed upon the goodwill of the game, the sportsmanship of the game. (The official) did."

Sapp is talking about linesman Jerry Bergman. Sapp said he's the one who started the whole fiasco by saying the Raiders declined a third-down penalty with 21 seconds left in the second quarter.

The Raiders wanted to accept the penalty to push the Jaguars back to the Raiders 35 and out of field goal range. Only after Sapp protested did the officials change the ruling and enforce the 10-yard penalty.

Sapp continued to argue about it with Boger when he says Bergman walked by and said, "It's f- fixed." Sapp countered with multiple f-bombs, and that's when defensive end Derrick Burgess joined the argument for his own unsportsmanlike conduct.

Several teammates on the field backed up Sapp's version, saying there was no physical contact. At least four Jaguars who were on the field said they didn't see a bump, and television replays didn't catch it.

If anything, the officials were the ones making physical contact with the players, several Raiders said.

"It was just ridiculous," cornerback Nnamdi Asomugha said. "Then (an official) came over to me, and I'm trying to break it up. I'm asking him a question, he starts pushing me out of the way. It got out of hand."

Sapp also accused officials of putting hands on him, including when the Raiders were trying to huddle. That's when Sapp said he was ejected.

Raiders coach Lane Kiffin said the team contacted the NFL offices Wednesday to see what would happen to Sapp, but the league had not gotten back to the Raiders as of Wednesday afternoon.

"I don't think there's anything to it," Kiffin said.

Neither does Sapp, but he doesn't expect the league offices to see it that way.

"It makes no sense to nobody why (I'm) the first dude that's ever been thrown out of an NFL game for non-physical contact," Sapp said. "I felt cheated. I felt like I should have whipped somebody's ass.

"I should have beaten somebody up so at least they put you on SportsCenter for whipping some ass. At least you get a little respect."